The City's Zoning Ordinance prohibits the parking or storing of commercial vehicles on residential lots, unless it is parked in a garage. A commercial vehicle may not be parked on the lot if any of the following conditions applies: manufacturer's GVW exceeds 7,500 lbs., vehicle load space is over 300 cubic feet or the vehicle has advertising/lettering/symbols exceeding 4 inches in height. Other prohibited commercial vehicles include tow trucks, stake body trucks, and trucks with dual rear wheels.

Yes, most door-to-door solicitors are required to obtain a County license as well as a City license. A license is required if they are selling, promoting, introducing, offering a free survey or anything else of value or of service. A license is issued to each person and not the company. Civic, religious, fraternal and charitable organizations approved by the City Manager are exempt from the license requirement. Licensed solicitors may only operate between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Generally, an inoperative vehicle is a vehicle that cannot be driven on a City street. An inoperative vehicle may have flat tire(s), dead battery, is not displaying valid registration plates, is dismantled or wrecked, cannot be driven under its own power, or has broken or missing parts, etc.

Generally, the generation of loud noise should not occur before 7 a.m. nor after 10 p.m. on weekdays (Monday thru Friday) and on weekends (Saturday and Sunday) there should be no generation of loud noise before 9 a.m. nor after 10 p.m.

Yes. The street is a public right-of-way intended for public use. We encourage residents to park on their side of the street. The City does have several parking regulations and restrictions. See Chapter 14 of the City Code. City Code

There is no limitation on the number of vehicles a resident may own. The vehicles must be operative, display valid tags, be parked on a paved surface or City street, and must comply with other parking regulations.

Open storage is the most common code violation. The City prohibits the outdoor storage of appliances, fixtures, tires, automotive parts and supplies, furniture, buckets, containers, building materials and supplies, litter, trash and debris, and other items generally stored in one's home, shed or garage. Residential storage is prohibited in any carport or front porch.